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Beauty in a Box: Detangling the Roots of Canada's Black Beauty Culture PDF

319 Pages·2019·7.043 MB·English
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Beauty ina Box Thompson (FA).indd 1 2019-01-18 9:28 AM Thompson (FA).indd 2 2019-01-18 9:28 AM Beauty in a Box DETANGLING THE ROOTS OF CANADA’S BLACK BEAUTY CULTURE CHERYL THOMPSON Thompson (FA).indd 3 2019-01-18 9:28 AM WILFRID LAURIER UNIVERSITY PRESS This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences, through the Awards to Scholarly Publications Program, using funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Wilfrid Laurier University Press acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for our publishing activities. This work was supported by the Research Support Fund. Funded by the Government of Canada aunn Oorngtaanriiosm geo vdeur ngmouevnet rangeemnecnyt de l’Ontario Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Thompson, Cheryl, 1977–, author Beauty in a box : detangling the roots of Canada’s black beauty culture / Cheryl Thompson. Includes bibliographical references and index. Issued in print and electronic formats. ISBN 978-1-77112-358-7 (softcover).—ISBN 978-1-77112-360-0 (EPUB).— ISBN 978-1-77112-359-4 (PDF) 1. Black Canadian women—Health and hygiene—History—20th century. 2. Beauty, Personal—Canada—History—20th century. 3. Beauty, Personal—Social aspects—Canada— History—20th century. 4. Beauty culture—Social aspects—Canada—History—20th century. 5. Black Canadian women—Social conditions—20th century. 6. African-American women— Race identity. 7. African-Americans—Race identity. 8. Hair—Social aspects—United States. 9. Beauty, Personal—United States. I. Title. HQ1220.C3T46 2019 391.0089’96071 C2018-904624-4 C2018-904625-2 Cover and text design by Chris Rowat Design. © 2019 Wilfrid Laurier University Press Waterloo, Ontario, Canada www.wlupress.wlu.ca This book is printed on FSC® certified paper and is certified Ecologo. It contains post-consumer fibre, is processed chlorine free, and is manufactured using biogas energy. Printed in Canada Every reasonable effort has been made to acquire permission for copyright material used in this text, and to acknowledge all such indebtedness accurately. Any errors and omissions called to the publisher’s attention will be corrected in future printings. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of the publisher or a licence from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). For an Access Copyright licence, visit http://www.accesscopyright.ca or call toll free to 1-800-893-5777. Thompson (FA).indd 4 2019-01-18 9:28 AM CONTENTS Introduction 1 CHAPTER 1 African Canadian Newspapers and Early Black Beauty Culture, 1914–1945 35 CHAPTER 2 From Ebony’s “Brownskin” to “Black Is Beautiful” in the News Observer, 1946–1969 69 CHAPTER 3 Black Beauty Culture in the Pages of Contrast and Share: Local Beauty Salons, Department Stores, and Drugstores in the 1970s and 1980s 121 CHAPTER 4 Global Conglomerates Take Over Black Beauty Culture: The Ethnically Ambiguous, “Multicultural” 1990s and 2000s 165 CHAPTER 5 The Politics of Black Hair in the Twenty-First Century 197 Conclusion 243 Notes 261 Selected Bibliography 291 Index 305 Thompson (FA).indd 5 2019-01-18 9:28 AM Thompson (FA).indd 6 2019-01-18 9:28 AM INTRODUCTION This book is about black beauty culture in Canada. Historically, the topic has received little scholarly attention in terms of Canadian history, advertis- ing history, media studies, and histories of race and racism. This book aims to fill in this gap. Beauty in a Box is one of the first book-length projects to explore not only the discursive politics attached to black women’s hair and skin but also the historical, transnational flow of products, beauty imagery, and services between the United States and Canada since the nineteenth century. One of the reasons why this topic has not received much attention until now is that the task of locating black voices in the Canadian historical record has been and remains a difficult challenge. There is also a general lack of cultural awareness about black Canadian women’s consumer practices. In No Burden to Carry (1991), for example, Dionne Brand observed of black women in Ontario that “these black women could talk about black women’s lives in the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, decades which seem to be missing in the historical record of black life in Canada.”1 The dearth of information about, and references to, black women led Brand to employ oral history as a method of inquiry. By recuperating textual histories along with records of a visual, ephemeral black culture, Beauty in a Box fills a gap in the historical record about black Canadian women not only in the period between the two world wars but in the post-1960s period, when a black immigration wave fundamentally changed black communities and the nation. This book argues that black beauty culture is an important aspect of the Canadian narrative that deserves not only critical interven- tion but also inclusion in wider conversations about race, capitalism, black feminism, retail consumerism, media, and advertising. 1 Thompson (FA).indd 1 2019-01-18 9:28 AM 2 BEAUTY IN A BOX This book is also a transnational study. As a theoretical frame, transna- tionalism is often used to explore two separate issues. In the first instance, the conceptual framework of transnationalism describes large-scale pro- cesses, movements, and migrations that cross national borders, as well as the transformation of the everyday lives of people whose practices and social locations are restructured in, and through, their entanglements with, and within, multiple sites of diaspora.2 In Canada, much of the scholarship on transnationalism as it relates to race has focused on this definition, as well as migrations and movements away from and back to the Caribbean. As D. Alissa Trotz observes, “[This scholarship] . . . (the vast bulk of which addresses itself to the post-1960s period) has tended to frame the debate in terms of settlement, assimilation, incorporation, adjustment and mar- ginalization.”3 Such scholarship has also placed heightened importance on the border and on discourses of belonging and not belonging to the nation, as well as emphasizing the experiences of Caribbean diasporas in Toronto and Montreal. Beauty in a Box engages in a similar transnational discussion, primarily in the first three chapters, where I chart not only the movement of black people into Canada and between provinces but also the strategies used by Caribbean and African American immigrants in the first half of the twentieth century to build community, establish diasporic networks, and redefine themselves amid a dominant culture rife with anti- black and anti-immigration sentiment. In the second instance, this book uses a definition of transnationalism that describes the movement of consumer capitalism into Canada and the convergence between local media and global advertising. It aims to explore the circulation of media, goods, and products from the United States and Canada, and how that circulation has been shaped by a globalizing American culture, especially in the post-1970s era, when black consumer and aesthetic practices reflected an Americanized form of blackness. Stated otherwise, as images crossed the border, ideologies and aesthetic practices also entered Canada, which led to a standard of beauty that more resembles an African American standard than one said to “represent” a black Canadian standard. In her examination of the circulation and travel of Indian citizens between India and the United States at the end of the twentieth century, Interpal Grewal found that “Americanness was produced transnationally by cultural, political and economic practices, so that becoming Ameri- can did not always or necessarily connote full participation or belong- ing to a nation-state.”4 Consumer culture, she explains further, “produced other transnational identifications and subjects where desires and fantasies Thompson (FA).indd 2 2019-01-18 9:28 AM INTrOdUcTION 3 crossed national borders but also remained tied to national imaginaries.”5 I argue that, while black Canadians did not necessarily travel to and from the United States as in the Indian context, similarly, there were cultural and economic practices that were co-produced through the circulation of “African Americanness” via local black media throughout the twentieth century. Canada’s consumer culture also co-produced transnational iden- tifications and subjects. As a result, African American images, products, and ideologies crossed the border as desires and fantasies via advertising and, later, television and film. This book articulates a spatial understanding of how the transna- tional—as movements/migrations and as desires/fantasies—has shaped black Canadian culture. Beauty in a Box probes the distance between black communities across the country, both geographic and symbolic, but it also considers their proximity to African American communities, espe- cially regarding cultural, aesthetic, and consumer practices. Importantly, Robin Winks’s The Blacks in Canada: A History (1971) was the first book to provide a comprehensive early history of black people in Canada. In it, Winks, a white author and history scholar who taught at Yale University, acknowledged the role black people played in Canadian history, especially regarding community-building and resistance to anti-black racism, but he also downplayed the importance of the advertising pages of the black press, among other things. Many of these publications were short-lived, and even though they may have contributed to a sense of racial pride among Afri- can Canadians, Winks opined that the papers “performed a temporar- ily useful supplemental function while generally avoiding controversial themes.”6 Second, he argued that these newspapers carried more adver- tising than news, and that the advertisements often were of a “dubious nature,” emphasizing hairpieces, cosmetics, and funeral parlours, together with references to butchers, dairies, restaurants, plumbers, and laundries that would accept black customers.7 Winks, who was writing at a time of social unrest in America, stripped away the myth of Canada as a place where black people were welcomed with open arms, but he still did not allow African Americans and black Canadians much agency.8 As Martin Berger observes of civil rights images in the 1960s, their success was hinged on “focusing attention on acts of vio- lence and away from historically rooted injustices in public accommoda- tion, voting rights, housing policies, and labor practices.” The photographs of racial violence, he writes further, “read in isolation illustrated racism as an interpersonal problem . . . and this obscured the structural inequalities Thompson (FA).indd 3 2019-01-18 9:28 AM

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